Archive for June, 2009

Signature Strengths Survey

June 28, 2009

Authentic Happiness

As a part of my continuing education as a hypnotherapist, I am taking a class through the Core Strengths Coaching Program at San Francisco State’s College of Extended Learning. The class is called Cultivating Core Strengths, Resilience and Optimism.

One of our homework assignments was to take the “Via Signature Strengths Survey” at authentichappiness.org, a site developed by Martin Seligman, Ph.D., Director of the University of Pennsylvania Positive Psychology Center, and author of the book Authentic Happiness: Using the New Positive Psychology to Realize Your Potential for Lasting Fulfillment.

After analyzing your responses to 240 multiple-choice questions, the survey identifies your “signature strengths.” While it is not a perfect instrument, I do feel it is worth taking. Whether or not you agree with the results, you are sure to engage in meaningful self-reflection.

To take the test, you must first register with authentichappiness.org. (It’s free.) Once you are registered, look for the “VIA Signature Strengths Survey” under “Engagement Questionnaires” in the center column of the home page.

Upon completing the survey, the site will generate your top five strengths. If you would like to see your ranking for all 24 strengths, go to: http://www.authentichappiness.org/all24/.

Seligman’s book also includes the survey and instructions for scoring:

authentichappiness.powells

New study shows that mood affects what we see

June 6, 2009

ScienceDaily

From ScienceDaily’s June 6, 2009 article, “People Who Wear Rose-Colored Glasses See More, Study Shows:”

A University of Toronto study provides the first direct evidence that our mood literally changes the way our visual system filters our perceptual experience suggesting that seeing the world through rose-coloured glasses is more biological reality than metaphor.

‘Good and bad moods literally change the way our visual cortex operates and how we see,’ says Adam Anderson, a U of T professor of psychology.  “Specifically our study shows that when in a positive mood, our visual cortex takes in more information, while negative moods result in tunnel vision. The study appears in the Journal of Neuroscience. Read the rest of the article here.


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